| Max Weber - 1946 - 516 pages
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| Talcott Parsons - 1961 - 840 pages
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| Talcott Parsons - 1961 - 840 pages
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| 1977 - 442 pages
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| Rogers Brubaker - 1984 - 119 pages
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| James D. Faubion - 1995 - 333 pages
...Weber finds the existential threshold of modernity in a certain deconstruction: of what he speaks of as the "ethical postulate that the world is a God-ordained,...somehow meaningfully and ethically oriented cosmos."" Take this reference out of context, add to it certain of the closing paragraphs of The Protestant Ef/iic,'... | |
| Daniel Brudney - 1998 - 460 pages
...world and its transformation into a causal mechanism, the tension definitely comes to the fore with the claims of the ethical postulate: that the world...hence somehow meaningfully and ethically oriented, cosmos."76 Now Feuerbach wants it both ways. He contrasts the religious view of the world with the... | |
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